Fire Practically
Destroys
Venezuelas Tallest Building
Venezuelanalysis.com - Monday, Oct 18, 2004
| A fire broke out on in the early morning hours of
Sunday in Venezuelas highest skyscraper, an
important government building in downtown Caracas,
destroying the top twenty of its fifty floors, including
those which housed the Ministry of Infrastructure
(MINFRA), the Motor Vehicle Department, and the Civil
Aviation Administration.
|
| President Hugo Chavez was on Margarita Island,
transmitting his weekly "Alo Presidente"
program, when he was informed by Jesse Chacon, the
Minister of Interior and Justice, that the East Tower of
the Parque Central building was on fire. "We have to
thank the lord that no one lost their life, the material
damage is reparable," President Chavez said in his
conversation with Chacon, who he asked to investigate the
incident. During the early morning hours, explosions
could be heard as flammable material ignited as well as
the explosion of windows that were reached by the fire.
The fire roared out of control for 17 hours, by which
time all floors from the 34th to the top had been burned.
|
|
| The Minister of Infrastructure, Ramón Carrizales,
also went up to the site to inspect the damage to the
offices that belong to his ministry. He announced that he
is looking for offices in the western tower of the Parque
Central as well as in other buildings in downtown Caracas
to move their offices as soon as possible. According to
Carrizales, there was much valuable material
contracts, plans, administrative plans
Three
Infrastructure Ministry employees and 14 firefighters
suffered toxic inhalation, but there were no fatalities
according to Fire Chief Rodolfo Briceño. However, damage
to the public offices are extensive according to Juan
Vicente Cabezas, President of the Simón Bolívar Center.
|
| Neither Briceño nor Cabezas identified a cause for
the fire. Breños said that there currently are three
hypotheses for the cause: the storage of flammable
material in the aviation administration, a short-circuit,
and arson. Cabezas said that firefighters were affected
by a lack of water and said that given this incident he
would accelerate the purchase of a helicopter for cases
such as these.
|
|
| Briceño said that the "direct impact was
produced from floor 34 to 38 of the east tower, and the
situation became critical in floor 35, where there were
open explosions. The problem that we faced was the water.
Parque Central does not count on minimal (fire) security
requirements, which makes it difficult to execute an
adequate fire extinguishing system," Briceño said
|
| Cabezas criticized the maintenance of the
building, since emergency exits were locked and many of
them blocked with furniture. The elevators were also
closed, which prevented firefighters from getting to the
scene earlier. "It has been difficult to control
the fire because the security systems, the pumps and the
pipe systems of the building do not work. We have done
various types of tests and some engineers have gone up in
order to activate the mechanisms, but it has not been
possible because proper maintenance was never done,"
Briceño said.
|
| Firefighters had to use hoses with a reach of 40
stories to put out the fire due to the lack of a
functioning sprinkler system in the building. Also
crucial in putting out the fire were army helicopters,
which unloaded water onto the side of the building, in
order to cool it off and thereby prevent structural
damage to it.
|
See also: The
9/11 WTC Fires: Where's the Inferno?
What Really Happened